British Columbia

B.C. police officer dies by suicide after being charged with sexual assault, police sources say

CBC News has learned that a Central Saanich Police Services officer charged with sexual assault on Tuesday has died. Several police sources say Matthew Ball died by suicide.

Death of Matthew Ball, 43, confirmed by several police sources day after Central Saanich officer was charged

A police officer wearing a tuque and a name badge reading 'M. Ball' speaks at a traffic intersection.
Sources have confirmed to CBC News that Matthew Ball with the Central Saanich Police Service — seen here in a 2020 TV story — has died by suicide, after he was charged with sexual assault and breach of trust on Tuesday. (CHEK News)

CBC News has learned that a Central Saanich Police Services (CSPS) officer charged with sexual assault on Tuesday has died.

Several police sources say Matthew Ball died by suicide Tuesday.

News of his death came one day after the 43-year-old was charged with one count each of sexual assault and breach of trust, following the completion of an investigation by the Vancouver Police Department.

Revealing their findings Tuesday, VPD Deputy Chief Fiona Wilson said Ball and another officer, Ryan Johnston, allegedly both had inappropriate sexual contact with a woman they met on duty.

A building marked 'Municipal Hall Central Saanich Police Service' on a sunny day.
The entrance to the Central Saanich municipal hall and police service in Central Saanich, B.C. (Google Street View)

Wilson told reporters the two officers each had separate relationships with a vulnerable woman in her mid-20s, who was an adult at the time of the alleged offences.

Ball was charged in relation to offences that are alleged to have happened between Feb. 1, 2019, and Oct. 31, 2023, in Central Saanich.

Wilson said that Ball, a sergeant who worked as a patrol officer when he was arrested, had served with the Calgary Police Service for around 12 years before he joined the CSPS in 2016.

A close-up picture of a Calgary Police Service shoulder patch.
A statement from the Calgary Police Service said it was co-operating fully with the VPD investigation. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

Vancouver police said the department was in touch with CSPS Chief Const. Ian Lawson over the allegations, as well as the Calgary Police Service.

In a statement, the Calgary Police Service said it had been notified of the charges laid against Ball.

"We are deeply disappointed that this former member is alleged to have conducted themselves in this manner," the statement read. "This behaviour is not reflective of the values of our service, nor the good work done by the majority of our members every day."

Johnston was charged in relation to offences that allegedly occurred between Feb. 6 and March 8, 2020. The 40-year-old worked as a constable in the CSPS general investigation section and was hired in 2017.


Central Saanich is a municipality in Greater Victoria, about 20 kilometres north of the provincial capital. It had a population of just under 17,400 people as of the 2021 census.

Lawson said in a statement that the service had notified the Office of the Police Complaints Commissioner about the charges and an investigation by the police watchdog is now underway. The service had a strength of 28 officers, according to its website.

"It would be an understatement to say that I was shocked and saddened to learn about these allegations," Lawson said.

He said the members had been suspended, and the service was moving to suspend them without pay after consulting with senior legal counsel.

WATCH | Wilson announces charges against two CSPS officers: 

Vancouver police announce arrest of 2 Central Saanich police officers

4 days ago
Duration 19:55
Vancouver police Deputy Chief Fiona Wilson provides a media update on two officers with the Central Saanich Police Service who were arrested and charged following allegations of unlawful sexual contact after a police investigation.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Akshay Kulkarni

Journalist

Akshay Kulkarni is an award-winning journalist who has worked at CBC British Columbia since 2021. Based in Vancouver, he is most interested in data-driven stories. You can email him at akshay.kulkarni@cbc.ca.